BOOK-CHAPTER

Sustaining Culturally Responsive Teaching Practices

Michael D. Revell

Year: 2020 Advances in early childhood and K-12 education Pages: 218-239   Publisher: IGI Global

Abstract

Just as the design, delivery, and development of culturally responsive teaching are constantly informed by di-unital, both/and, mindfulness, this, then, means that restorative practices are, also, capable of developing a similar intersubjectivity. Moving restorative practices beyond the dichotomous underuse of being designed, delivered, and developed apart from conveying academic instruction allows this body of work, presented here, to instead evoke cultural responsiveness to inter-subjectively filter restorative practices within instructional planning, instructional preparation and instructional delivery. Doing so conveys academic content “through” restorative practices while restorative practices simultaneously happen “with” learners of color.

Keywords:
Mindfulness Psychology Pedagogy Culturally sensitive Best practice Intersubjectivity Sociology Psychotherapist Social psychology Political science Social science

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FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
164
Refs
0.84
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Citation History

Topics

Teacher Education and Leadership Studies
Social Sciences →  Social Sciences →  Education
Critical Race Theory in Education
Social Sciences →  Social Sciences →  Sociology and Political Science
Education Discipline and Inequality
Social Sciences →  Social Sciences →  Education
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